Vivid Live 2014 is the biggest, brightest and most involving chapter yet of the festival that invigorates Sydney's late autumn/early winter, each year.

Vivid is all about art and technology, the relationship between them, and the projection of the end result of their fusion. It involves, challenges and beautifies. It reflects culture and extends the relationship between man and machine. It casts multimedia to the wind and sees what happens when it settles.

The streets are filled with people carrying smartphones, tablets, laptops, cameras of every shape and size, tripods, even the odd Go-Pro. No wonder intel is a major sponsor.

Vivid captures how we interact with technology and how technology through art can illuminate our environment.

For me it is wonderful opportunity as an amateur photographer to play in Alice's Wonderland.

This year, I decided to tackle the majority of Vivid Live - outside of shooting the sails on the Opera House - with a very simple set up. My Canon EOS 7D camera, fitted with a Canon ultra wide angle 10-22mm lens.

An ultra wide angle lens can give you some edgy results. It is noted for barrel distortion when wide open at 10mm - not that this is a problem for anybody who likes their photos straight up and down; it is easily fixed in Photoshop. But that's exactly what I didn't want to do. I wanted to use that distortion and the lovely effect it throws to add to already edgy installations, light shows and spirit of Vivid.

The great thing about the 10-22mm lens is the distortion is non-existent from 14mm onwards. So you get the best of both worlds.

I carted a tripod with me and used it for probably 30 per cent of the shots you will see in the slideshows that will make up this series. The rest of the photos are shot hand held.

I used, in the main, settings of f4 to f7.1 with the ISO generally around the 1200-1600 mark, spinning down to 400-800 if I could, and exposures from 1/8-1/30, across the full range of 10-22mm

On a few occasions I went the other way - on tripod shots - and I'll point them out when they come up. Basically, I wanted to get the lovely depth you get on long exposures mixed with mid range f-stops and ISO at 100 t0 200.

Here, I mostly shot 10 second exposures at f7.1 and ISO 200. Everything was shot, of course, in RAW format.

All images were processed in Canon's native Digital Photo Professional suite using the High Dynamic Range tool on some occasions to bring out the luminosity captured in the RAW format. Any further processing needed was done in Adobe Photoshop which has an excellent camera RAW tool.

The slideshows are broken down into four distinct sets: 1. Martin Place - with all its installations; 2. The area around Circular Quay, the old Passenger Terminal and Opera House; 3. The Sydney Harbour Bridge; 4. Darling Harbour.

Remember, I'm an amateur so whatever I've managed to capture is within the reach of anybody with a relatively decent camera. Or you can do what a lot of people were doing: blast away on a smartphone or tablet.

Larger versions of the photos in the slideshow can be seen on my Flickr page.

PCW Evaluation Team

Microsoft Office continues to make a student’s life that little bit easier by offering reliable, easy to use, time-saving functionality, while continuing to develop new features that further enhance what is already a formidable collection of applications

I need power and lots of it. As a Front End Web developer anything less just won’t cut it which is why the MSI GT75 is an outstanding laptop for me. It’s a sleek and futuristic looking, high quality, beast that has a touch of sci-fi flare about it.

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